I guess I should have said most annoying version. Every 5 minutes or so the notification banner pops up telling me that I have 7 new emails, except I don't. If you are online for an hour and get this 12 times it is really annoying. 1.3 was not beauty either. Under both linux and windows it would freak out every once and a while when I walked out of a 802.11b network. It would go to 99% of cpu power. I would just kill it and restart and the problem would go away for a while. oH WELL ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dennis Kibbe" To: "PLUG" Sent: Sunday, July 13, 2003 8:18 PM Subject: Re: Mozilla Mail 1.4 buggy? > On Sun, 2003-07-13 at 13:54, Rob Wultsch wrote: > > Dennis Kibbe wrote: > > > Rob, > > > > > > I agree with David Uhlman that it is critical to remove an earlier > > > version. Uninstalling Mozilla 1.3 via the Win2k control panel left some > > > DLLs in the mozilla.org folder which I needed to manually delete before > > > 1.4 would install. > > > > > > If you've found Mozilla 1.4 "to be the most stable" I'm curious why you > > > slammed it as "the buggiest mozilla that I have dealt with" in your > > > original post. > > > > > > Dennis Kibbe > > > > Just because an application does not crash does not mean that it is bug > > free. 1.4 I have found to be significantly faster and featured filled > > than earlier versions, however bugs are aparent in this version. > > > > Of course, all software has bugs, that's a given. But since you didn't > say WHY Mozilla was "the buggiest mozilla" ever we had nothing to judge > whether it WAS in fact Mozilla that was causing the bugs. > > I believe an application is innocent until PROVEN guilty. Example: a > while back I upgraded GNOME and suddenly it would lock up after a few > hours. Buggy software, you say? I was beginning to think so, but GNOME > wasn't to blame. At the same time I was trying out a firewall script > that, among other things, blocked packets to localhost which meant that > it broke some daemons that expected to communicate with my machine. > Remove the script and GNOME stopped misbehaving and I learned something > about writing firewall scripts. > > We use Free/Open Source software with the understanding that it is a > work in progress and comes without warranty. Software developers like > nothing better that to get good, meaningful bug reports from users. > Simple saying "it's buggy" helps no one. Better that you put that > software aside and return to it later if you can't find a way to > contribute to helping fix the bugs. > > Dennis Kibbe > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >